Skip to main content

Nvidia might finally fix its VRAM problem — but it will take time

The Razer Blade 14 and 18 on a table.
Luke Larsen / Digital Trends

It’s no secret that some of Nvidia’s best graphics cards could use a little more VRAM. According to a new leak, Nvidia may be addressing that problem in a big way — at least in laptops. The RTX 5090 laptop GPU is now reported to come with 24GB VRAM across a 256-bit memory bus. The downside? These new laptops might not make it to market as soon as we’d hoped.

The information comes from Moore’s Law Is Dead, who cites his own industry sources as he spills the beans on RTX 50-series laptop specs. Up until now, we’ve not heard much about Nvidia’s plans for RTX 50 laptops, indicating that they might be a few months away. The YouTuber agrees with this, saying that Nvidia might be targeting a launch window in the first or second quarter of 2025. This might not affect the entire lineup, though.

Recommended Videos

The reason why Nvidia might be planning to increase the VRAM on the laptop RTX 5090 is that it’s planning to use newer GDDR7 memory modules for it, with 3GB, up from 2GB. This boosts the memory capacity from 16GB (which the company used in this generation) to 24GB. However, as Moore’s Law Is Dead speculates, that also might be why Nvidia is holding off on the RTX 5090 laptop GPU in particular.

Speculation about the RTX 5090 laptop configuration.
Moore's Law Is Dead

According to the YouTuber, Nvidia’s current plan is to first launch the RTX 5090 and the RTX 5080 in their desktop versions this year. It’s worth noting that most leakers disagree with this timeline — the GPUs aren’t expected to be announced until CES 2025 at this point.

Following the reported desktop launch, Nvidia is said to be unveiling some RTX 50-series laptops at CES 2025 in January, but those will all use the memory modules that are ready now, meaning the 2GB versions. As per the source cited by Moore’s Law Is Dead, the RTX 5090M doesn’t come in a 16GB configuration at all, which is why it won’t be launched alongside the rest of the lineup. Laptop cards like the RTX 5080, RTX 5070, and RTX 5060 might all still make an appearance at CES and launch shortly after with 16GB, 12GB, and 8GB of memory, respectively. They’ll use the 2GB modules, though.

One interesting thing to note is that, while Nvidia will likely use the GB203 die for the desktop RTX 5080 and then use that same die for the RTX 5090 (laptop version), the desktop card will still be limited to just 16GB of memory. In the grand scheme of things, this kind of adds up — if Nvidia is launching desktop GPUs first, the RTX 5080 wouldn’t have been ready with more memory assuming that these 3GB modules aren’t readily available yet. But all of this is still just speculation, and the final specs are unknown to the public.

More VRAM on laptop GPUs is certainly good news for gamers, but it’s hard to know how much of this will turn out to be true. As things stand now, we might not have any concrete information until CES 2025.

Monica J. White
Monica is a computing writer at Digital Trends, focusing on PC hardware. Since joining the team in 2021, Monica has written…
Prime Day is the perfect time to ditch Nvidia for AMD
AMD's RX 7700 XT in a test bench.

There's no doubt that Nvidia makes some of the best graphics cards you can buy, but if you're shopping Prime Day deals, you'll want to take a careful look at Team Red. There's barely an Nvidia GPU in sight that's on sale, and even among those that are discounted, the prices aren't very good. On the other hand, AMD has cards marked down from already reduced prices, making Prime Day the perfect time to score a deal on a GPU.

By far, the best deal I've found is the XFX Speedster QICK319 RX 7800 XT. You can read more about the card in my RX 7800 XT review, but in short, it trades blows and sometimes even beats Nvidia's $600 RTX 4070 Super. The price right now is insane, too. This model normally sells for $520, but it's 18% off for Prime Day, bringing the price down to $427.

Read more
Buy now, fix later — PC hardware feels like it’s in early access
CPU pads on the AMD Ryzen 7 9700X.

PC hardware is feeling increasingly unstable at launch, and that really came into view with AMD's release of Ryzen 9000 CPUs. AMD released several updates for these CPUs in the weeks following their release, boosting performance by significant margins. That performance was absent from these CPUs at launch, as you can read in our Ryzen 9 9950X and Ryzen 9 9900X review, suggesting they weren't quite ready for prime time when they released in August.

AMD isn't alone here. Although Intel's 13th-gen and 14th-gen didn't have big issues at release, they've faced a major instability crisis that forced Intel to replace an untold number of impacted CPUs. Between the latest two generations from AMD and Intel, buying a CPU has meant signing on for problems that are hard to foresee.

Read more
MKBHD updated his Panels app, but didn’t fix the biggest problem
A screenshot of the Panels app.

Last month, MKBHD launched his new wallpaper app, only for it to be met with a huge wave of criticism and backlash over its pricing structure and ads. The popular YouTuber responded to the criticisms in a post on X in a bid to soothe angry fans, but it didn't have the expected effect.

https://x.com/MKBHD/status/1838582554749755438

Read more